Intraocular lens alignment
A method for generating a radial alignment guide for an eye includes collecting preoperative alignment data relative to a pupil from an eye that is not dilated. The method also includes locating a pupil center of the eye while dilated. The method further includes displaying the alignment data on an image of the dilated eye relative to the pupil center. In particular embodiments, software embodied in a computer-readable medium is executable by a processor to perform the steps of such a method.
Latest ALCON RESEARCH, LTD. Patents:
This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §119(e) to provisional application Ser. No. 61/153,709, filed Feb. 19, 2009, and provisional application Ser. No. 61/155,562, filed Feb. 26, 2009.
BACKGROUNDFor the past decade, ophthalmic surgeons have tried several methods to correct preexisting astigmatism during cataract eye surgery, including making incisions into the cornea to alter the shape of the eye. Now due to the unique design of toric intraocular lenses (IOL), astigmatism can be reduced or corrected without further surgical intervention. A tonic IOL restores focus to the eye when the natural lens or cataract is removed, but it is also designed to correct preexisting astigmatism using the same technology that has been successfully used in contact lenses.
Before the surgery, the amount of corneal astigmatism that needs to be corrected must be determined. In general, the procedure is as follows:
-
- 1. Pre-Operative Examination (Keratometry, Corneal Topography, Slit Lamp)
- 2. Calculation of IOL orientation
- 3. IOL Selection
- 4. Surgical insertion of toric IOL and alignment according to pre-calculated axis
The success of such procedures depends in part upon the angular accuracy of the IOL alignment. All of the above steps have the potential to introduce a certain degree of error resulting in under-correction of astigmatism. However, a dominant source of error is the misalignment of the toric IOL according to the calculated angular value after it is inserted into the anterior chamber of a patient's eye during the cataract procedure. This may be, for example, due to the fact that the calculated IOL angle is based on measurements conducted with the patient sitting upright (pre-op setup) and alert, while during surgery the patient is in the supine position where cyclorotation occurs and under the influence of local anesthetic. Each degree of angular error may cause a 3.3% loss of astigmatic correction by the toric IOL. Thus 10° of error may cause a 33% reduction in the effect of the toric IOL, which is equivalent to using a spherical lens without astigmatism correction.
In order to avoid error due to the cyclorotation effect, there are currently several techniques to mark the eye with the meridian and pre-calculated IOL axis of alignment during the pre-operative examination. These techniques typically require the surgeon to place reference marks at the 3-o'clock and 9-o'clock meridians at the limbus utilizing markers or puncturing devices. Markings made by markers may be inaccurate, and may wash away or drift. Furthermore, puncturing the cornea is invasive and carries considerable risk of infection and/or other side effects.
SUMMARYIn certain embodiments of the present invention, a method for generating a radial alignment guide for an eye includes collecting preoperative alignment data relative to a pupil from an eye that is not dilated. The method also includes locating a pupil center of the eye while dilated. The method further includes displaying the alignment data on an image of the dilated eye relative to the pupil center. In particular embodiments, software embodied in a computer-readable medium is executable by a processor to perform the steps of such a method.
In other embodiments, a system for generating a radial alignment guide for an eye includes a memory, a processor, and a display. The memory is operable to store preoperative alignment data relative to a pupil from an eye that is not dilated. The processor is operable to locate a pupil center of the eye while dilated. The display is operable to display the alignment data on an image of the dilated eye relative to the pupil center.
The present invention may be understood with reference to the following drawings wherein:
In various embodiments of the present invention, toric intraocular lens alignment (IOL) for cataract surgery is improved by providing an accurate radial grid or alignment guide to assist a surgeon in lens placement. A slit lamp microscope may be used to obtain images of an eye, and an image overlay including a radial grid, lens alignment guide, and/or other fiducials for rotational alignment may be provided as a surgical guide in any suitable form including a computer display, a printed image of the eye showing information, or by direct projection onto the eye during the procedure
According to various methods and systems described herein, a radial grid is centered on a center of the pupil and overlaid on an image of the eye (or in one embodiment directly onto the eye). The pupil center may be located, e.g., automatically using any appropriate center-finding image processing technique, or manually through a point-and-click computer interface or the like. For example, the pupil center can be located using a variety of image analysis techniques, including but not limited to the techniques described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,740,803 to Gray et al., which is incorporated herein by reference. The grid may include vertical and horizontal meridians and a scale at any suitable degree of accuracy. Within a user interface, angular measurements may be selected and marked on the grid to various features of the eye such as blood vessels, iris features, or any other appropriate fiducials. The grid may also include an alignment guide showing the correct rotational orientation for an IOL lens, as calculated prior to a surgical procedure. By calculating an angle relative to, e.g., the vertical meridian, an accurate guide may be displayed in the radial grid for use by a surgeon.
Other aspects of systems and methods for aligning a lens are described below. In an embodiment using a slit lamp microscope, a suitable video camera may be mounted on a slit lamp microscope through a beam splitter. The camera may be connected to a computer with image acquisition hardware using a connector such as USB, FireWire or GigE port. Live display may be started, and the camera may be aligned so that the horizontal axis of the camera's field of view is aligned with the horizontal slit of the slit lamp. High quality images may be captured with the patient sitting upright, and software may attempt to automatically locate the central point of the pupil. The software may also include a manual pupil localization tool. Once the central point of the pupil is defined, the software may overlay a radial grid with its center located on that point as shown, e.g., in
-
- Overlay of the toric IOL axis according to the angular value calculated through Keratometry. The toric axis IOL axis will cross the center of the dial and the angular value will be in reference to the 0 to 180° axis of the overlaid dial (see line with angle value 156 degrees in
FIG. 1 ) - Overlay of axes that cross through the dial center and other anatomical landmarks that the surgeon chooses as fiducial marks on the eye's iris periphery or limbar vessels. The software will display the angular value next to each one of these reference points (see line with angle value 82.5 degrees in
FIG. 1 ).
- Overlay of the toric IOL axis according to the angular value calculated through Keratometry. The toric axis IOL axis will cross the center of the dial and the angular value will be in reference to the 0 to 180° axis of the overlaid dial (see line with angle value 156 degrees in
The software may also designate the images with the left or right eye designation and temporal or nasal side of the eye (see letters “R” and “T” in
The processed images may be stored on the computer's hard drive, removable memory, or in the patient database of the medical facility. The surgeon may retrieve and display images with overlay in an operating room in a high quality photograph or on a monitor, or the overlay may be projected directly onto a patient's eye using an appropriate projector.
Based on the overlaid axes of the fiducial points, the surgeon can accurately place a surgical protractor that determines toric IOL insertion regardless of the cyclorotation effect. As soon as the protractor is aligned with the actual eye meridians, the surgeon can proceed with aligning the toric IOL according to the calculated angular value.
This method addresses several sources of error in the IOL alignment process for cataract surgery by
-
- a. Providing a mechanism for accurate camera alignment with the slit lamp microscope
- b. Offering precise location of the pupil center based on image analysis
- c. Enabling accurate protractor placement during surgery by guiding the surgeon to place the protractor according to the actual meridians of the eye hence generating an accurate reference angular system
The methods or processes described above, and steps thereof, may be realized in hardware, software, or any combination of these suitable for a particular application.
In the embodiment depicted in
Thus, in one aspect, each method described above and combinations thereof may be embodied in computer executable code that, when executing on one or more computing devices, performs the steps thereof. In another aspect, the methods may be embodied in systems that perform the steps thereof, and may be distributed across devices in a number of ways, or all of the functionality may be integrated into a dedicated, standalone device or other hardware. In another aspect, means for performing the steps associated with the processes described above may include any of the hardware and/or software described above. All such permutations and combinations are intended to fall within the scope of the present disclosure.
While the invention has been disclosed in connection with the preferred embodiments shown and described in detail, various modifications and improvements thereon will become readily apparent to those skilled in the art.
Claims
1. A method for generating a radial alignment guide for an eye, comprising:
- collecting preoperative rotational alignment data relative to a pupil from an eye that is not dilated, the preoperative rotational alignment data comprising a rotational offset relative to a meridian of the eye;
- locating a pupil center of the eye while dilated during implantation of a toric intraocular lens;
- displaying a radial grid on an intraoperative image of the dilated eye, the radial grid comprising a vertical axis and a horizontal axis each passing through the located pupil center; and
- displaying a rotational alignment axis for the toric intraocular lens, during the implantation of the toric intraocular lens, on the intraoperative image of the dilated eye, the rotational alignment axis being offset relative to one of the vertical axis and the horizontal axis by an amount equal to the rotational offset of the preoperative rotational alignment data.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein locating the pupil center comprises manually moving a pointing device to locate a center of an eye.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein locating the pupil center comprises automatically locating the pupil center using image analysis software.
4. A system for generating a radial alignment guide for an eye, comprising:
- a memory operable to store preoperative rotational alignment data relative to a pupil from an eye that is not dilated, the preoperative rotational alignment data comprising a rotational offset relative to a meridian of the eye;
- a processor operable to locate a pupil center of the eye while dilated during implantation of a toric intraocular lens; and
- a display operable to display: a radial grid on an intraoperative image of the dilated eye, the radial grid comprising a vertical axis and a horizontal axis each passing through the located pupil center; and a rotational alignment axis for the toric intraocular lens, during the implantation of the toric intraocular lens, on an intraoperative image of the dilated eye, the rotational alignment axis being offset relative to one of the vertical axis and the horizontal axis by an amount equal to the rotational offset of the preoperative rotational alignment data.
5. The system of claim 4, further comprising a pointing device that is manually movable to indicate a center of the pupil to the processor.
6. The system of claim 4, wherein the processor is operable to locate the pupil center using image analysis software.
7. Software embodied in a non-transitory computer-readable medium executable by a processor to perform the steps of:
- collecting preoperative rotational alignment data relative to a pupil from an eye that is not dilated, the preoperative rotational alignment data comprising a rotational offset relative to a meridian of the eye;
- locating a pupil center of the eye while dilated during implantation of a toric intraocular lens;
- displaying a radial grid on an intraoperative image of the dilated eye, the radial grid comprising a vertical axis and a horizontal axis each passing through the located pupil center; and
- displaying a rotational alignment axis for the toric intraocular lens, during the implantation of the toric intraocular lens, on the intraoperative image of the dilated eye, the rotational alignment axis being offset relative to one of the vertical axis and the horizontal axis by an amount equal to the rotational offset of the preoperative rotational alignment data.
8. The software of claim 7, wherein locating the pupil center comprises receiving an indication of the center of the pupil from a pointing device.
9. The software of claim 7, wherein locating the pupil center comprises automatically locating the pupil center using image analysis software.
5089022 | February 18, 1992 | Koester et al. |
5740802 | April 21, 1998 | Nafis et al. |
5740803 | April 21, 1998 | Gray et al. |
5757461 | May 26, 1998 | Kasahara et al. |
5867210 | February 2, 1999 | Rod |
5975084 | November 2, 1999 | Alpins |
6241356 | June 5, 2001 | Von Wallfeld et al. |
6352519 | March 5, 2002 | Anis et al. |
7146983 | December 12, 2006 | Hohla et al. |
7331667 | February 19, 2008 | Grotehusmann et al. |
7654668 | February 2, 2010 | Neuhann et al. |
8414123 | April 9, 2013 | Boukhny et al. |
8486085 | July 16, 2013 | Moeller et al. |
20020097378 | July 25, 2002 | Saito et al. |
20030053025 | March 20, 2003 | Turner et al. |
20030060880 | March 27, 2003 | Feingold |
20030071893 | April 17, 2003 | Miller et al. |
20030120266 | June 26, 2003 | Fujieda |
20040100619 | May 27, 2004 | Olivier et al. |
20040102799 | May 27, 2004 | Perez et al. |
20050025365 | February 3, 2005 | Oosawa |
20050117118 | June 2, 2005 | Miller et al. |
20050225721 | October 13, 2005 | Harris et al. |
20060247659 | November 2, 2006 | Moeller et al. |
20070055222 | March 8, 2007 | Hohla et al. |
20070274626 | November 29, 2007 | Sabeta |
20080247616 | October 9, 2008 | Pescatore et al. |
20090137988 | May 28, 2009 | Kurtz |
2209053 | July 2003 | RU |
WO 92/03989 | March 1992 | WO |
WO 01/28476 | April 2001 | WO |
01/78584 | October 2001 | WO |
01/89373 | November 2001 | WO |
02/064031 | August 2002 | WO |
WO 02/074248 | September 2002 | WO |
WO 03/022137 | March 2003 | WO |
2006/044056 | April 2006 | WO |
2008/008044 | October 2008 | WO |
- Arbelaez, et. al., “Clinical Outcomes of Corneal Vertex Versus Central Pupil References with Aberration-Free Ablation Strategies and LASIK,” Dec. 2008, Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science, Dec. 2008, Lnkd-Pubmed: 18658090, vol. 49. NR. 12, pp. 5287-5294, XP002584895, ISSN: 1552-5783, Materials and Methods: p. 5287, Figure 5.
- Ma, et. al., “Simple Method for Accurate Alignment in Toric Phakic and Aphakic Intraocular Lens Implantation,” Journal Cataract and Refractive Surgery, Surgery, Fairfax, VA Lnkd-DOI: 10.10163/J.JCRS.2008.04.041, vol. 34, No. 10, Oct. 1, 2008, pp. 1631-1636, XP025627296, ISSN: 0886-3350.
- Nguyen, Et. al., “Digital Overlay Technique for Documenting Toric Intraocular Lens Axis Orientation,” Oct. 2000, Journal of Cataract and Refractive Surgery, Oct. 2000, Lnkd-PubMed: 11033397, vol. 26, NR. 10, pp. 1496-1504, XP002584785, ISSN: 0886-3350.
- Yang, et. al., “Pupil Location Under Mesopic, Photopic, and Pharmacologically Dilated Conditions,” Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science, Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology, US, vol. 43, No. 7, Jul. 1, 2002, pp. 2508-2512, XP002537709, ISSN: 0146-0404, Pupil Center Location; p. 2509-2510, Discussion, p. 2511-2512.
- International Search Report for International Application No. PCT/US2010/024482, 4 pages.
- Written Opinion for International Application No. PCT/US2010/024482, 6 pages.
- International Search Report for International Application No. PCT/US2010/024483, 4 pages.
- Written Opinion for International Application No. PCT/US2010/024483, 5 pages.
- European Search Report for Application No. 08162267.2. Publication No. EP2025305, Published Feb. 18, 2009, 3 pages.
- Espacenet—Bibliographic data, English Abstract of RU2255716(C1), Avetisov, et al, “Method for Cataractous Extraction and Implantation of Intraocular Lens (IOL) at Correcting Initial Oblique Astigmatism”; Jul. 10, 2005; 1 pg.
- Kent, “Locking on: Eye Tracking for the 21st Century”, Rev. Ophthal., 2007, 7 pgs.
Type: Grant
Filed: Feb 15, 2010
Date of Patent: Sep 1, 2015
Patent Publication Number: 20100208199
Assignee: ALCON RESEARCH, LTD. (Fort Worth, TX)
Inventors: Ilias Levis (Westwood, MA), Katariina Lahti (Westwood, MA), Boris Nalibotski (New London, CT)
Primary Examiner: Zachary Wilkes
Application Number: 12/705,799
International Classification: A61F 9/007 (20060101); A61B 3/11 (20060101); A61B 3/135 (20060101); A61F 9/00 (20060101); A61F 2/16 (20060101);